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CLB Tiếng Anh BE - Nơi hội tụ của những người Việt trẻ năng động, sáng tạo và chuyên nghiệp - "TẦNG

Chủ đề trong 'Anh (English Club)' bởi luu_vinh82, 29/05/2008.

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  1. luu_vinh82

    luu_vinh82 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    21/09/2006
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    Welcome Tungkeng to BE CLUB.
    I am sure that you will find BE CLUB a good place to improve your skills and to make friends.
  2. Juria86

    Juria86 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    13/10/2006
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    @Mr. Vĩnh: This Sunday, I and Trang babe will be MCs, we now need 2 other MCs. Topic will be posted here tomorrow, Trang babe chose the topic this time.
    To all: we need 2 MCs, Plz Raise your hand !!!
  3. luu_vinh82

    luu_vinh82 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    21/09/2006
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    To: 21 MCs
    This Sunday, May & Trang will be MCs. We need further 2 MCs. Among those who are listed below, plz, register to become MCs this week:
    1, Nguyễn Thị Thu Hằng 0988 900 324
    2, Nguyễn Thị THu Hương 0988 928 483
    3, Lê Thị Lan Hương 0988 098 003
    4, NGuyễn Xuân Trường 0984 474 947
    5, Nguyễn Tuấn Anh 0976 311 839
    6, Storm 0983 384 353
    7, Đỗ Gia Thắng 0912 645 775
    8, Nguyễn Thị Dung 0974 840 070
    9, Trần Trúc Quỳnh 0983 651 247
    10, Nguyễn Hồng Mây 0917 659 778
    11, Vũ Hải Phong 0946 698 699
    12, Đỗ Tuấn Việt 0977 434 823
    13, Vũ Thị Cẩn 0979 249 996
    14, Hùng IT 0906 007 317
    15, Trang Babe 0122 997 2238
    16, Đinh Hà Trang
    17, Dũng Hnkid
    18, Mr Linh (rocker)
    19, Mr Doanh
    20, Mr Thao
    21, Vo Tu Oanh
    Được luu_vinh82 sửa chữa / chuyển vào 09:06 ngày 16/07/2008
  4. Hangfunny

    Hangfunny Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2008
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    To Mr Vĩnh : Yesterday, May said to me that she and Ms Trang Babe and Tuan Anh will be MCs this offline meeting. They need one more guy, so called Mr Thang Gov and he agrred to be MC; therefore we have enough MCs for this week.
  5. tuananhbsdk

    tuananhbsdk Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    26/11/2007
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    @ Mr Vinh: Sorry for my late information. After the online conference last night among Babe, Mei, Babyangel, Kinhcan_deptrai87, Thang Gov and I, we have come up with a conclusion that:
    Official Team of MCs this week: Babe+Kinhcan - Babyangel+tuananhbsdk
    911 Team (in order of prioirity): Thang Gov, Mei, Hung IT, Dung HP.
    Topic will be posted here tonite.
    Have a nice day, my dear friends.
  6. scorpion18

    scorpion18 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    17/06/2008
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    What a pity that you have enough MCs already as I intended to raise my hand for this week. But anyway, will try next time. Wish you a awsome Sunday.
    Below is for you to have some fun:
    English of 21st century
    Hover go for water it pure: Lượn đi cho nước nó trong
    I want to toilet kiss you : Anh muốn cầu hôn em
    Son with no girl: Con với chả cái
    Like is afternoon: thích thì chiều
    Tangerine do orange flunk: quýt làm cam chịu
    Sky down no enemy: Thiên hạ vô địch... keke
    Eat picture :Ăn ảnh
    Home face road: Nhà mặt phố
    Dad do big: Bố làm to
    No family live Vô gia cư
    Go dust Đi bụi
    Sugar sugar a Hero man : Đường đường 1 đấng anh hào
    Light as feather pink: Nhẹ như lông hồng,
    If you blood, I will afternoon: May mau thi tao chieu
  7. scorpion18

    scorpion18 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    17/06/2008
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    N sum more 4 u 2 rid:
    A struggle to keep the good times rolling
    Panos
    WORRIES about the soaring cost of living are being felt across Asia, but in few places is there more concern than in Vietnam, where the government this week said the annual inflation rate had hit 14.1%, its highest since 1995. On January 30th the central bank raised its various official interest rates by up to 1.5 percentage points to try to prevent an inflationary spiral.
    The country is suffering from the worldwide surge in the cost of fuels and foodstuffsâ?"food prices are up by a whopping 22% year-on-year. But the inflationary spike is also partly the consequence of a prolonged boom: Vietnam''s economy grew by around 8.5% last year, one of Asia''s most impressive rates, having grown by an average of 7.5% annually in the previous decade (see chart). As the country develops at breakneck speed, bank lending is expanding fast (by 37% last year) and there is massive demand for building materials and equipment, exacerbating the risk of overheating.
    Nevertheless, the government, keen to keep the good times rolling, does not want to cool the economy down. In January the prime minister, Nguyen Tan Dzung, reiterated his â?odeterminationâ? to ramp up this year''s growth to 9%. But Nguyen Van Giau, the governor of the State Bank of Vietnam, the central bank, admitted that curbing price rises was â?overy urgentâ?. As well he might: the rising cost of living has caused a rash of strikes and worries that food might be scarce over the Tet lunar new year holiday this month. The next day the prime minister gave another speech, calling for a â?owell-managed monetary policyâ? and urging improvements in the central bank''s forecasting and supervisionâ?"which sounded rather like a public dressing-down to the governor.
    Vietnam''s inflation target is not very exacting: the aim is only that it should fall below the rate of economic growth. But even this proved too hard last year, when inflation was around four percentage points higher than growth. After the prime minister''s ticking-off, the central bank tightened banks'' reserve requirements, to rein in their lending. (China, also worried by rising food prices, announced similar measures the same day.) However, the Vietnamese central bank this week loosened some restrictions on lending for share purchasing, imposed last year to discourage investors from borrowing to bet heavily on the then soaring stockmarket. The measures were, it seems, too successful: the main VN share index ended the year 21% below its March peak.
    China and Thailand have responded to public discontent at rising food costs with further price controls on some staple items. So far, Vietnam, which is intent on liberalising its economy after joining the World Trade Organisation last year, has not followed suit. Indeed the government talks only of further relaxing its grip on prices: it plans soon to start letting the market set the prices of fuels, though it has not named a date. It is also busy privatising, thereby freeing from official control prices set at present by state firms. However, it does still own enough of the food-distribution chain to be able to promise plentiful supplies of cheap produce for Tet.
    Some of the things Vietnam wants and needs to do to make the economy more competitive in the long term are pushing up prices in the short term. This is true, for instance, of a big infrastructure drive to build roads, power stations and so on. The IMF, worried that public spending is intensifying inflationary pressures, is urging the government to save any windfall from its recent tax reforms, rather than use it to boost spending on infrastructure even more. The World Bank, by contrast, is urging it to spend even more on such projects, worried that the country''s continued growth will otherwise be at risk. The state electricity firm has been giving warnings of blackouts as it struggles to meet big increases in demand.
    The reform of public-sector pay is also fuelling inflation. Minimum wages for public servants were increased by 20% in January. In the long run, decent wages for the police and other officials should help cut corruption, which itself increases costs. Businessmen, for instance, grumble about the bribes their lorry-drivers have to pay to highwaymen in uniform. But such increases in spending power will also add to inflationary pressure. Privatisation is another example. Over time, liberated state firms should become more efficient and thus cut their prices. But in the short term they may take advantage of their freedom to raise them.
    The dong with voluminous flows
    Rising inflows of foreign direct investment and speculative money have put Vietnam''s currency, the dong, under strong upward pressure. Early last year the central bank responded by selling dong for dollars, building up foreign-exchange reserves and thus bolstering defences against speculative attackâ?"but also stuffing the banks with excess liqui***y and prompting the lending splurge.
    In December the central bank switched tactics and increased the flexibility of its currency regime. The dong can now fluctuate within 0.75% of a central rate reset each day, supposedly in response to market pressures. However, the bank still seems to be managing the central rate, which has not moved far. Pham Hong Hai of HSBC, a bank, in Ho Chi Minh City, says a stronger dong would do much to curb inflation. Officials, farmers and some manufacturers are worried that it might also hurt exports. Mr Hai suggests that the central bank could point out that exporters are suffering from rising costs of imported fuels and raw materialsâ?"so they would get at least some benefit from a currency rise. Several big privatisations are on the way, which will greatly increase foreign inflows, making it harder still to resist the pressure to let the currency rise. Higher interest rates should also help, says Dominic Scriven of Dragon Capital, an investment firm in Ho Chi Minh City. Until this week''s rise they were barely above zero in real terms.
    The global economic storm-clouds now gathering could have a silver lining for Vietnam, provided the tempest is not too harsh or prolonged. The country earns a lot from exports, especially of farm produce. But much of its growth is driven by domestic demand. So a modest weakening in external demand might be just enough to stop the economy overheating and curb inflation, allowing Vietnam''s remarkable run of growth to continue at a more sustainable rate.
  8. MrStorm

    MrStorm Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    17/09/2007
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    @scorpion18 : Nice information ^^
    Dạo này forum nhà ta có vẻ vắng vẻ quạnh hiu quá - em có đề nghị là thay đổi không khí 1 tí - Ngoài Tiếng Anh ra ta có thể sử dụng bất cứ loại ngôn ngữ nào để comment lên forum ^^
  9. tungkeng

    tungkeng Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    01/11/2007
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    Em thấy mỗi bác Luuvinh trả lời, không biết các thành viên khác đồng ý cho em tham gia BE club không nhỉ?
  10. MrStorm

    MrStorm Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    17/09/2007
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    Hi . Chào đón bác đến với đại gia đình BE ^^
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